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by Molly M. Ginty
Whatever stage of life you’re in, and whether you’re
physically fit or living with chronic illness, you
can find ways to be a wise steward of your health
and well-being. Our health and wholeness are
important keys to responding to God’s call for us
and acting boldly on that call. That’s why Women of
the ELCA have embarked on a new health initiative
for the 2005-2008 triennium: Raising up Healthy
Women and Girls. This ongoing column represents our
commitment to the issue of women’s health.
Carolyn Warner nearly died of her doctors’
ignorance. In August 1997, she was driving on the
freeway when she suddenly felt a tingling in her
arms and shortness of breath. She got off at the
next exit, pulled in at a hotel, and called for
help. The emergency room doctors shrugged off her
symptoms as mere anxiety. But when she visited a
cardiologist two weeks later, she discovered that
she had a 98 percent blockage in her right coronary
artery and needed immediate surgery.
"I continued having cardiac events that required
emergency attention," says Warner, 60, a food
industry consultant in Upland, California. "But
three more times, medical providers failed to
recognize my symptoms, which are less dramatic in
women than in men. Paramedics and doctors continued
telling me I had anxiety — even though I eventually
had a heart attack and had to have triple bypass
surgery."
Warner (who had a family history of heart
disease, but whose doctors never monitored her) is
just one example of how the American health care
system can fail women. Medical schools often do not
teach their students about health problems unique to
women, so physicians might not recognize them in
their female patients. Because most health research,
including drug testing, is conducted on men, gender
differences are not always tracked in the first
place.
Heart disease, the number one killer of women in
the United States, is a good example of this gender
gap. Two-thirds of its female victims die with no
previously recognized symptoms, though heart disease
is largely preventable. Health experts say part of
the problem is doctors’ lack of awareness. That’s
confirmed by a recent Gallup poll that revealed 88
percent of primary-care physicians are unaware that
women’s heart disease symptoms differ from men’s.
Plaque that builds up in the arteries of women is
likely to be softer and more diffuse than it is in
men. If women have blockage, it is usually found in
the smaller, often overlooked branches, not the
major arteries.
"During heart attacks, women tend to have pain in
the upper abdomen instead of the chest and to have
more secondary symptoms like sweating, fatigue,
dizziness, and shortness of breath," says Dr.
Marianne J. Legato, chair of the Partnership for
Gender-Specific Medicine at Columbia University in
New York. "Women also tend to have heart attacks ten
years later than men, around age sixty."
According to the National Coalition for Women
with Heart Disease in Washington, D.C., women
account for only 36 percent of open-heart surgeries
and 25 percent of heart research subjects. Women are
less likely to receive medication after their first
heart attack, and so are more likely to die of heart
disease.
The good news for women with heart disease and
other illnesses is that medical experts have started
to focus more on their specific needs.
Gender-specific medicine, one of the hottest fields
in health care, is discovering that gender makes a
difference, not just in heart disease, but in many
other conditions.
In some cases, these gender-specific health
differences give women an edge. Estrogen helps
protect women from pancreatic cancer. Stronger
immune systems help women fight infections more
effectively.
And across the globe, women consistently outlive
men by an average of six years. In other cases,
being female can pose health hazards. Because
women’s lungs are more susceptible to carcinogens,
women who smoke are more likely to get lung cancer
than men. Women are at higher risk for gallstones
(crystals in the gall bladder), osteoporosis
(thinning of bones), and multiple sclerosis,
rheumatoid arthritis, and lupus (all three
autoimmune diseases).
"Studies also show that women are two to nine
times more likely than men to contract HIV, the AIDS
virus, after unprotected heterosexual sex with an
infected partner," says Dr. Mary A. Young of the
Center for Sex Differences at Georgetown University
Medical Center in Washington, D.C.
To help women beat the odds, health advocates are
developing gender-specific diagnostic tools, such as
ultrasound machines that can detect their more
subtle symptoms of heart disease. They are altering
dosage recommendations for medications, reducing
dosages for women because they tend to be of lighter
weight than men. To save more women’s lives,
advocates are working to improve awareness,
screening, research, and treatment.
Medical experts also are urging women to speak
out and become stronger advocates for their own
health. "Research shows that doctors often attribute
women’s symptoms to emotional disturbance,
particularly when it comes to heart attack symptoms,
chest pain, or shortness of breath," says Dr.
Legato. "That’s why it’s important to be
straightforward with your doctor. Never downplay
your illnesses, and never assume you are imagining
your symptoms."
Molly M. Ginty lives in New York. Her work has
appeared in Ms., Marie Claire,
Redbook, and Women’s eNews.
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
National Institutes of Health Office of Research
on Women’s Health
www4.od.nih.gov/orwh
To learn about ELCA resources for health and
wellness, go to
www.elcaforwellness.org.
Eve’s Rib: The New Science of Gender-Specific
Medicine and How It Can Save Your Life by
Marianne Legato, M.D.
Article published in Lutheran Woman Today,
September 2005
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